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Equity and Justice Working Group equitybd

Social cultural and economic rehabilitation of climate change -induced forced migrants Require a New Global Protocol to Recognize Climate Refugees as Universal Natural Persons. Equity and Justice Working Group www.equitybd.org. Climate Change Induced Human Migration.

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Equity and Justice Working Group equitybd

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  1. Social cultural and economic rehabilitation of climate change -induced forced migrants Require a New Global Protocol to Recognize Climate Refugees as Universal Natural Persons Equity and Justice Working Group www.equitybd.org

  2. Climate Change Induced Human Migration Climate change affects migration in three ways. First, reduce agriculture potentials, undermine ‘ecosystem services’ e.g. water and fertile soil. Second, increase extreme weather events- floods cyclone , droughts etc Finally, sea level rise and permanent dislocation of millions of people IPCC AR4, in 2007, outlines climate change impacts in six areas: ecosystem; food; water; health; coasts; and industry, settlement & society.

  3. Climate Change Migration: Who will be affected more? Developing countries and the poorest people will suffer most because of unfavorable geography, limited assets In Bangladesh sea level rise poses an existential threat that would inundate 18 percent of Bangladesh’s total land, directly impacting 11 percent of the country’s population. Salt water from sea level rise in low-lying agricultural plains could lead to 40% decrease in food grain production and will increase forced migration to the urban slum areas

  4. Climate Change Migration: How big the number of displaced people? IPCC AR1 in 1990 estimated 150 million by 2050, Prof Norman Myers of Oxford University estimates as many as 200 million people Stern Review in 2006 estimates 200 million; Christian Aid report in 2007 estimates 250 million It mean by 2050 one in every 45 people in the world would have been displaced The number of future climate migration is ten fold increase on today’s documented refugees and internally displaced persons (IPDs)

  5. Climate Change Migration: How they are defied? UNEP defines CC Displaced person as ……. who have been forced to leave their traditional habitat, temporarily or permanently, because of marked environmental disruption (natural and/or triggered by people) that jeopardized their existence and/or seriously affect the quality of life’. They are defined as …….. ecological and environmental refugees, climate refugees, climate change migrants, environmentally- induced forced migrants etc.

  6. Climate Refugee: Contradicts with the Political Refugee Use of environmental or climate change ‘refugee’ raises many objections as this particular term is commonly used and legally defined in the 1951 Refugee Covenant. UNHCR and IMO have advised that the terms like ‘Climate Refugees’ or Environmental Refugees’ have no legal basis in international refugee law and should be avoided

  7. Climate Refugee: Political Refugee: who are they? Mandate of UNHCR on refugees’ covers only individual who flee their countries because of state-led persecution based on race, religion, political opinion, or ethnicity. The official definition of refugee is based on very narrow legal concern recognized under the 1951 Geneva Convention that characterize refugee as; ……. a person who is outside his or her country of nationality or habitual residence, and can not rely on his of her home sate for the fear of maltreatment..

  8. Climate Refugee OR Environmentally Displaced Persons ! Therefore, some international organizations are trying to treat Climate Refugees as ‘environmentally displaced person’ This is in line with the mandates of the UNHCR’s Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) Wherein international communities made less responsible to mitigate the crisis. Migrants and displaced persons falling within the definition that are not clearly recognizable may not receive appropriate assistance

  9. Climate Refugee OR Few Questions ! Are the environmental factors only driving force of displacement and migration? Are the poor states capable to face the crises cumulatively build-up by the rich countries and, why they should? Why to fit ‘climate related forced displaced persons’ to the ‘political refugees’? Why should inhabitants of Maldives and coastal people of Bangladesh receive similar treatment as the political refugees, which are narrowly defined under the 1951 Geneva Convention?

  10. Climate Refugee: How they should be treated? The people forced to be migrated due to CC should be given a different status and they should be treated as ‘Universal Natural Person’ with social, cultural and economic rehabilitation. To rightly address the global processes of forced displacement it is important to develop a legal framework, under the United Nations Framework Convention Climate Change (UNFCCC). This reflects the most fundamental issues related CC Accountability - the obligation on the polluting countries of the global north to address the needs of the countries that will suffer most in the global south

  11. Universal Natural Person’ Why we are asking this status? The industrialized, defied as annex I countries under the UNFCCC on climate change, historically contributed most of the manmade GHGs emissions but the impacts of climate changes distributed very unevenly and disproportionately. Those who have contributed least to the human- induced climate change should accept all the burden and distress. The United States share of 29 %, European Union 26 % Russia 8% Overall, developing countries only 24 % emissions,

  12. Universal Natural Person’ Why we are asking this status? • This unequal distribution of burdens of the effect of climate changes reflected in the article 3 of the convention (referred to as equity article). It stipulates that; • Parties should protect the climate system ‘on the basis of equity and in accordance with their common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities, • b) Developed countries should take the lead in combating and the adverse effect thereof.

  13. Universal Natural Person’ Why we are asking this status? The ongoing negotiation on this Equity Principle of UNFCCC is focusing two major strategies to address climate change e.g. mitigation and adaptation. It has not clearly defined how to address the multi-causality of environmental (forced) displacement largely caused by climate change. Climate change-induced migrants should be termed as a ‘new’ group in need of protection while existing legal frameworks and conventions are not sufficient to safeguard them.

  14. Universal Natural Person’ Three basic principles should be considered Dignity:The legal debate over the issue of environmental refugees must take into account the dignity of the concerned population as their own responsibilities for the past accumulation of GHGs are small. Status: The people forced to be migrated due to climate change should be given ‘Universal Natural Person’ status with social, cultural and economic rehabilitation. Treatment: The climate refugees must be treated as permanent immigrants to the regions or countries that accept them. The climate refugee regime must be tailored as entire groups of people

  15. Thank You All www.equitybd.org

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